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  • Oct. 1, 1795
  • Page 5
  • SOME ACCOUNT OF MR. BAKEWELL, OF DISHLEY.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Oct. 1, 1795: Page 5

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    Article SOME ACCOUNT OF MR. BAKEWELL, OF DISHLEY. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 5

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Some Account Of Mr. Bakewell, Of Dishley.

In this place it maybe worth while to insert the following statement of the prices given , at an auction , for stock bred from Mr . BAKEWEXL ' . The- sale to which we advert was that of Mr . FOWLER , of Rollright , in Oxfordshire . After his death , one article of his five stock , the horned cattle , sold for a value equal to that of the fee-simple of his farm ! Fifteen liead alone of bulls and cows sold for 2 , 4 60 ) . or at the rate of 16 4 I . each !

Among Mr . BAKEWELL ' cimosities are a rump and a surloin of a cow , more than 20 years old when killed , which , is wonderfully fat . It is now more than four inches thick in fat , and would , without doubt , have been considerably thicker had she been killed at an earlier age . He had also two p ieces of bacon , one from a hog with very large bone , and the other from one with very small bone . The latter was eleven inches through to the boneand the farmer not half so deep .

, It was his opinion , that the only way to improve the breed of cattle is to keep up the price ; for if the price is low , people send any kind of cows , and if the produce fails the bull is blamed . ; but if the price is high , they are particular , and send none but the very best , which is the only method to improve the breed . The same argument , he holds good with all other kinds of cattle .

says , To shew the difference of judgment in respect to the value of cattle , Mr . BAKEWELL observed , that some years since lie used to attend Loughborough Tup-Market , where he had a ram which he let for TWENTY-FIVE GUINEAS . ' Soon after the agreement , another farmer " wanted to purchase this ram , and Mr . B AKEWELL ( in joke ) asked

him twenty-five shillings for it . The farmer offered eighteen , and at last they par'ed for two shillings!—A heifer sold at Mr . PEARCE ' sale , near Northampton , for EIGHTY GUINEAS ; and , a few days after , - . as she was driven through Leicester , a party of farmers standing together valued her at about ei g ht pounds . Mr . BAKEWELL had let a bull to a gentleman for fifty guineas for the seasonThe gentleman ding in the interimand the executors

. y , iiot knowing any thing of this transaction , sold the bull by auction with the rest of the cattle . When the season was over , Mr . BAKEWELL sent for his bull , and , after investigating the matter , found , to his great surprize , that the bull bad been sold to a butcher for about eight pounds , who had killed it , and sold it for two-pence-halfpenuy poundMr . BAKEWELLin course lied to the executors for

per . , , app the value , which was fifty guineas for the season ( the stipulated agreement ) , and 2 CO guineas for the bull . The executors ' refused payment , thinking that , as the bull was sold by public auction , before a great number of farmers , and many of them thought to be men of judgment , for only eight pounds , it was an imposition . Mr . BAKEWELL was therefore obliged to bring an action for the amount ; and people with this

appearing as witne-ses on the trial , who were acquainted breed , ancl making oath that Mr . B . had not overvalued his bull , a verdict was given in Mr . B . ' s favour to the full amount , with costs of suit . * Mr . B AKEWELL , at the time of his death , was verging on his 70 th , year . In person he was tall , broad set , and , in his latter years , rather inclined to corpulency . His countenance bespoke intelligence , acti-

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-10-01, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01101795/page/5/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON : Article 1
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 2
Untitled Article 2
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 2
Untitled Article 3
SOME ACCOUNT OF MR. BAKEWELL, OF DISHLEY. Article 4
ON THE ERRORS OF COMMON OPINION. Article 6
THE HAPPY WORLD. A VISION. Article 10
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 13
DETACHED THOUGHTS ONBOOKS. Article 15
HISTORY OF MASONRY. Article 18
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 25
ANECDOTE. Article 25
THE STAGE. Article 26
REMARKS ON GENERAL INVITATIONS. Article 27
AMERICAN ANECDOTES. Article 28
TO THE EDITOR. Article 31
ON THE LOVE OF NOVELTY. Article 34
ON THE DIFFERENT MODES OF REASONING Article 36
THE CHARACTER OF WALLER, AS A MAN AND A POET. Article 39
A METHOD OF ENCREASING POTATOES, Article 41
NEW SOUTH WALES, Article 42
TO THE EDITOR. Article 44
LIFE OF THE DUKE OF GUISE. Article 47
SINGULAR INSTANCE OF FACILITY IN LITERARY COMPOSITION. Article 48
A SWEDISH ANECDOTE. Article 49
ACCOUNT OF THOMAS TOPHAM, THE STRONG MAN. Article 50
SPEECH OF QUEEN ELIZABETH, ON MONOPOLIES. Article 51
DIRECTIONS AND OBSERVATIONS RELATIVE TO FOOD. Article 52
TO THE EDITOR. Article 54
THE WORM AND BUTTERFLY. Article 56
Untitled Article 57
ANECDOTE. Article 57
THE SENSITIVE PLANT AND THISTLE. A FABLE. Article 58
FRENCH ARROGANCE PROPERLY REBUKED. Article 58
A CAUTION TO THE AVARICIOUS. Article 58
A WELL-TIMED REBUKE. Article 59
NAVAL ANECDOTE. Article 59
TO THE EDITOR. Article 59
POETRY. Article 60
IMPROMPTU, Article 60
THE SUNDERLAND VOLUNTEERS. Article 61
IMPROMPTU, Article 61
MONSIEUR. TONSON. A TALE. Article 62
SONNET. Article 65
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 65
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 66
HOME NEWS, Article 67
PROMOTIONS. Article 72
Untitled Article 72
Untitled Article 73
BANKRUPTS. Article 73
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Some Account Of Mr. Bakewell, Of Dishley.

In this place it maybe worth while to insert the following statement of the prices given , at an auction , for stock bred from Mr . BAKEWEXL ' . The- sale to which we advert was that of Mr . FOWLER , of Rollright , in Oxfordshire . After his death , one article of his five stock , the horned cattle , sold for a value equal to that of the fee-simple of his farm ! Fifteen liead alone of bulls and cows sold for 2 , 4 60 ) . or at the rate of 16 4 I . each !

Among Mr . BAKEWELL ' cimosities are a rump and a surloin of a cow , more than 20 years old when killed , which , is wonderfully fat . It is now more than four inches thick in fat , and would , without doubt , have been considerably thicker had she been killed at an earlier age . He had also two p ieces of bacon , one from a hog with very large bone , and the other from one with very small bone . The latter was eleven inches through to the boneand the farmer not half so deep .

, It was his opinion , that the only way to improve the breed of cattle is to keep up the price ; for if the price is low , people send any kind of cows , and if the produce fails the bull is blamed . ; but if the price is high , they are particular , and send none but the very best , which is the only method to improve the breed . The same argument , he holds good with all other kinds of cattle .

says , To shew the difference of judgment in respect to the value of cattle , Mr . BAKEWELL observed , that some years since lie used to attend Loughborough Tup-Market , where he had a ram which he let for TWENTY-FIVE GUINEAS . ' Soon after the agreement , another farmer " wanted to purchase this ram , and Mr . B AKEWELL ( in joke ) asked

him twenty-five shillings for it . The farmer offered eighteen , and at last they par'ed for two shillings!—A heifer sold at Mr . PEARCE ' sale , near Northampton , for EIGHTY GUINEAS ; and , a few days after , - . as she was driven through Leicester , a party of farmers standing together valued her at about ei g ht pounds . Mr . BAKEWELL had let a bull to a gentleman for fifty guineas for the seasonThe gentleman ding in the interimand the executors

. y , iiot knowing any thing of this transaction , sold the bull by auction with the rest of the cattle . When the season was over , Mr . BAKEWELL sent for his bull , and , after investigating the matter , found , to his great surprize , that the bull bad been sold to a butcher for about eight pounds , who had killed it , and sold it for two-pence-halfpenuy poundMr . BAKEWELLin course lied to the executors for

per . , , app the value , which was fifty guineas for the season ( the stipulated agreement ) , and 2 CO guineas for the bull . The executors ' refused payment , thinking that , as the bull was sold by public auction , before a great number of farmers , and many of them thought to be men of judgment , for only eight pounds , it was an imposition . Mr . BAKEWELL was therefore obliged to bring an action for the amount ; and people with this

appearing as witne-ses on the trial , who were acquainted breed , ancl making oath that Mr . B . had not overvalued his bull , a verdict was given in Mr . B . ' s favour to the full amount , with costs of suit . * Mr . B AKEWELL , at the time of his death , was verging on his 70 th , year . In person he was tall , broad set , and , in his latter years , rather inclined to corpulency . His countenance bespoke intelligence , acti-

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